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Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1875-05-01

Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1875-05-01 page 1

fell p0 VOL. XXXVI. COLUMBUS, SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1875. NO. 101. SIEBERT & LILLEY, Blank Bool Manufacturers. Printers, Binders, Stationer And Legal Blank Publishers. BOOK BINDING Of every description, by tbe ingle Volume. Kditlon or OPF.BA HOUSE BCII-DESG, (Up Suite.) mrtO COU'WBtm. Ohio Merchant Tailoring Co., MERCHANT TAILORS, 110 DIALERS II Wonts' Fine Furnishing Goods, No. 168 80CTI1 HIBH ST., , (Opera Home Block), COLUMBUS, 0. JNO. RICH, Supt and Treat. , S. W. 8TIMS0N, Foiemau. myl ly BROWN & CO., Fashionable Hatters. Bilk suit Felt. all tub latest SPRINGSTYLES SOLK AGENTS FOR The most perfect fitting Shirt in the market, in stock and made to order, for $12 end $15 per half dozen, ap30 tf No. 5 Nell House Block. Office! Hiffb, Pearl ami Chnpel Sts. j. ii. coult. a. w ra.Noiaco. COMLY & FRANCISCO, PCBLISHIBS AMP PRiJPKlKTOaH. JAMEN M. OOWI.Y, Rain to-day, Kith southtail to toulhweti winds, flight change) in Umptratun and falling barometer. The Colorado beetle, so-called, does not trouble Colorado. Its peculiar bless-iugs are reserved for other parts. The defense, in the Bcecher trial, concluded its testimony yesterday and rested its case. It was then proposed by the prosecution that Mrs. TUton should be called, but Mr. Evarts, in behalf of the defense, objected. The prosecution then proceeded to call its rebutting witnesses. , Subscripiions to the Soioto Valley railway are still actively taken along the proposed line. The project is taken hold of with enthusiasm by the people interested, and its prospects are improving every day. The time to push matters is now, and no time should be lust or necessary effort neglected. The tide is rising that will carry this enterprise on to suc-oess if taken at the flood. The total number of pieces of mail matter of all classes originating at the postorBces in the Ohio towns named be-jow during the four weeks commencing January 11, 1875, was as follows: Akron, 65,652; Canton, 42,689; Hamilton, 41,-339: Mansfield, 74,040; Mt. Vernon, 20,- 377; Portsmouth, 25,633; Sandusky, 34,- 802- Springfield, 78,880; Bteuhenviiiei 29.569: Youngstown, 37,129; Zaneaville, ' Vice President Wilson'. Movements, Louisville, April 30. Vice President Wilson arrived in Me city to-aay, ana durinr the dar has received a large num ber of calls from prominent gentlemen of Doth political parties, lo-mgui uu in siven a reception by General Harlan, and to-morrow goes to Frankfort as guest of Colonel Stoddart jonnaon. r rom r raiiK-fort he will go to Lexington to visit Hon, John C. Breckenridge, who, as Vice Presi dent, nreaidod over the Senate during one ol Mr. Wilson's earlier terms. He will anend Sunday in Lexington, and thence start on his Western trip, intending to ispend some time in California. A faeicneel crew Again Mi Ian recked Kam Francisco, April 30. The bark- online Maroiua. thirtytwo days from Tahiti, reports the capsiiing of the .schooner Margi.net Crockard, from Tahiti ,te this port, having oh board the officers and crew of the British ship Airey Force, wrecked on the passage from Australia to San Francisco. Sixteen were drowned, the remainder, with Captain Godfrey, of the iCrockard, and Captain Collier, of the Airey f orce, arrived at Janm. The break in the works for the preserva tion of the falls at Minneapolis lias been nearly stopped by employing one hundred men night and day, and no further present danger is apprehended. The break occurred on the east side at a place where the limestone Is but twelve to eighteen inehee thick, and washed a hole sixteen to twenty feet across through the decom posed rock to the old tunnel, emptying below the lower falls. Miss Ida Lillian Greeley, daughter of tbe late Horace Ureeley, will be married to uolonet Nicholas smith, of Kansas, today. Tbe bridal party will sail for En' gland on the Abyssinia immediately after the ceremony. Smith graduated with high honors from Bufus Choate'e class at Cambridge, and is a promising young .lawyer. A. -naha dispatch of Thursday says 'Raven ,nni.,red returned California eml- . grants have arri.ed here in the last two BY TELEGRAPH TO TBE OBIO STATg JOURNAL ATHENS. ' The IMIen Trlnl-Piwrreae er the Bpefiial te ta Ohio but. Journal. Athens, 0., April SO. Thadeat ton g-etrelh, of Columbus, ttti6ed in the Mien trial to-day, telling hit experience during the greet strike. Thii afternoon ffu principally occupied in tbe aeirinr; of various men, who wanted to work at Neisonville, in April or May, 1874, tell the itory of their wrongs. All but oneof them connected Elder ion directly with their troubles. The defense ere now on so extensive a line that they will not finish to-day and may not to-uiornaw. LANCASTER. Suicide of a Faraltaro Dealer -Reel. Sr.ra ataraea. Special to the Ohio Bute Journal. Lancaster. 0.. April 30. A man named George DaTenport, who has been In the furniture business at Jew Lexington, attempted suicide there yesterday by cutting his throat. ihe residence of Jacob Moore, who re sides near Winchester, was destroyed by fire yesterday afternoon. Loss $1500. OSRKOSH FLEE. Blalyalao Banians atrnelures and rive Hundred Dwellings Uealroj. .d-Tbe t'urnt Dlalrlct to b. He-kalis Immediatei!- List at la.ui- aace Losses. Chicaoo, April 30. A special from Oshkosh says the prospect at that city is already brightening, and the prospects are that before winter a majority of the business blocks will be rebuilt. The debris is cleared away from the principal streets, which are thronged with visitors who have come to see the ruins from all directions. Insurance meu are present from all parts of the country. They do not take a discouraging view of the conflagration as a general thing, and not a few have de clared they will stand ready to renew their risks. 1 lie structures Durnea aown were generally Dretty well innnred. and are owned by men who can afford to rebuild. The vaults of the First National Bank were opened to-day and tbe contents found intact, gixtynine business structures were destroyed, and about half of the will be rebuic imediately. The police to-day made a careful count and find that, large and small, tbe sum total of dwellings destroyed is about live hundred. These are valued at an average i J500, which gives an aggregate loss of SI 250 oC "hicb is probably near the correct figure. The- loss on business houses is about Sl.OUu,??0' a.".d " 'umb1'!r interests from $200,000 to tto!y, mf kJ the insurance ia fully $1,000,000, or 40 per cent, of the loss. The agency that did the tnoBt busines' lost all their books, but have nearly arrived at the correct figures of their losses. Tbe following are the amounts sus tained by each of the companies, as nearly as the most diligeni inquiry can fix them. These are usually the figure! that will be forwarded to the main offices : Home of New York, $10,000; -Etna, Hartford, $80,000; North America, Philadelphia, $70,000; London, Liverpool and Globe, $80,000; Phoenix, Hartford, $46,1)00; 8uringlield, Massachusetts, Fire and Marine, $43,000; Continental, New York, $40,000; Northwestern National, of Mil waukee, S44,uuu; nortu British. Mer cantile, $30,000; Hartford, of Hart ford, SDU.uuui . new underwriters, $30 000; Allemania, Pittsburg, $25,-000; Madison Mutual, $28,000: PliaSDix, Brooklyn, t.'l.oou; JNiagara, ol r York, 17,UOU: Urtent, ol Hart ford, $10,600; German American, New York, $25,000: Lancashire, of England, $20,000; Penn, of Philadelphia, $10,000; Pennsylvania, $lo,UUO; tire Associa tion of Philadelphia, $15,000; , People's, of Memphis, St. Paul Fire and Marine, of Hartford, and the Atlas, of Hartford. SlO.OOOeach; Fire and Marine of Detroit, and Brewers, of Milwaukee, $8000 each: Citizen's, of Newark. flew Orleans Association, Franklin, of Wheel ing, Millville, JNew Jersey, 00W each; Home, ot (Joiumutt", tosuu; rianters, ot Memphis, Black River, of Watertown, New York, America, of Pittsburg, National, of Hartford, Fanenil Hall, Boston and franklin, ot Philadelphia $5000 each; St. Joseph, of Missouri, $3000; Traders, of Chicago, and Globe, of Chicago, $3000 each; Merchants, of New ark. $2000. Outside ol the lumber inter est the insurance is about fifty per cent. ot Josses. Among the heavy losers are James & Stille $90,000, insurance fil.uuu; it. u Begger S70.000. insurance SIO.UUU: McKev&Tolds $35,000: Clark & Forbes $30,000, insurance $21,000; S. M. Hoy & Brother $45,000: P. J. Watson w,uuu, insurance $10,000; Gill A Rogers $25,000. A relief oommittee has been organized. and substantial assistance for the afflicted is arriving from Fond du Lac and other neighboring cities. Last evening at a meeting of the Council the lire limits were nnsnea lorwara ui me uireuuuii miui which fire always threatens. The object is to take the 8a w and planing mills out of this locality. LOUISIANA. Sulla In Benair at tbe Stale to He- cover Meaeys raid (Iiuler JllegHl Vouelicrs. New Orleans. April 30 William P. Kellogg. Governor of the Slate of Louisi ana, represented by A. P. Field, Attorney General, has hied a petition in the oa lienor District Court against diaries Clinton. Auditor, and the securities on his special bond, Charles Menard, cnaries U. blaynaoic, yviinam union, J. ni Schwartz, and George C. Benliam, in Sa- lido, to recover judgment against saia Clinton for the sum of $279,783, the amount received from tax collectors in the vear 1873 unaccounted for, detained and' withheld by said Clinton; for the further sum of $60,300, the amount ille gally paid James Longstreet; for the further sum ol $40,i)t ine amount i era Iv taken from the tax col lectors by said Clinton and used by him. and for the further sum of $138,657 charged to be due tor illegally issuing six warrants to Ueorge w.pennam tor 500: James B. Wand for 814,872; E. W Dewees for $27,600; O. W. LowelJ for $14,278; James B. Matthews lor $14,bua and J. 11. Ug esbv for S39.407. The above warrants were lssnea unaer legislative voucher for appropriations for 1870. '71, '7 AO! MO. W ol 1874 and represented what was known as tiio Pinck ney Smith legislative vouchers for thepe years, tor warrants in pennon are con tained in the arllclei ot impeachment. Mr. H. K. List, of Wheeling, recently sold 250,000 pounds of wool at a single sale. It is claimed that tnis is tbe larg est single wool transaction that has ever taken place in the regions round about Wheeling. ' The price was not stated, fur ther than the mention of the fact that be told at decline from former otftri,- HERE WE REST. Teatiaaoay Concluded oa Ibe Part rihe lMeam. Beach Willing, Bit EvarU Beiasrt, U Call Kra. THUa. Tti FroaocutiDB Commencet IU Be butting Evidence. Adjournment Till Monday at the Request of Jurors. New York, April 80. Mr. Beecher was not preseut at his trial this morning, but his wife and son were. There wss'a noticeable increase of lookers on. The croaa-examinalion of Mr. Tracy was con tinued ss follows: 1 had a converaatioo with Mrs. Moulloa the Bight her hus band made his short statement before I he committee. I learned that night that the short statement had been proposed in stead of the long one, that Mrs. Moulton was instrumental in preparing it. (Shown a paper.) I presume this is the statement presented on the evening or August 1(1. Witness's attention was called to a con versation with Mrs. Moulton on the 10th of August, and witness said he under stood the conversation was confidential, aud be did not desire to make it known unless the Isdy should desire it. He said, however, it was not a conversation in which he, witness, was acting as coun sel for the lady. 1 had a conversation with Mrs. Moulton. but did not tell her be had saved the old man, nor advise her to burn her husband s long statement, telling her that if it were published it would sause her husband's ruin finan cially and socially. I never said to her to kick Tiltonout of the house and burn the document, as he would bring her family into trouble and disgrace. I ea Mr. Richards when he was before the committee. I did not ask him in the interview before be went before the committee if his sister admitted having committed adultery. He said he would com municate to uie nothing of what he knew in regard to the matter. I had an inter view with Bessie Turner at Mrs. Oving- ton's before she went before the committee. I met her for the first time that afternoon, and had a con vnrsatlon with her that evening in the parlor. I labored to have the documents extinguished and the scandal killed, so that it should never come to lile again. 1 will swear I did not labor to have the papers destroyed, though I labored to suppress the documents. Be-direct examination: I understood at tnis later stage that if the papers were destroyed it would add fuel to tbe flame, as part of them had already been published, t was a source of anxiety to me lest any of these papers should be destroy ed, and I made efforts to discover if any of them were destroyed. There was talk bet'a r8, Moulton and myself, after the Bacon letteT " out. l liu that would be done ttmi'.J .' this, matter came out. I remember an occasion on which I considered the subject ol getting an injunction to prevent ine papers being uesiroysa, i was alter niton s sworn statement was puuiiaueu n a conversation with Air. iticharas- when he was going before the committee told linn who 1 was, and that 1 would conduct his examination. He said he had notliiug to say, and would decline to answer any questions put to him by the committee on the ground that this was a family matter, and ho would not have it drawn out before the committee. I said he would be asked if his sister had committed adultery, and he made no answer or refused to answer it. It would put bis sister in a bad position. He thanked me for tliiB suggestion and then went before the committee and declined to appear before them for examination, aud then went off. Beecher was not a parly to the inter view between General Butler and myself on the 11th of August, at my lodging house. Beecher was nut in the house then, and I was not acting for him. In regard to the interview at the Fifth Avenue Hotel Beecher knew nothing about it. I was counsel for Woodrutt at Kohlnson Government matter which did not come to litigation. At no time in this examination have I given any informa tion about these litigations of the firm. Mr. f.varts here annouuoed that tne de fense rested. Mt. Beach rose and said it was due to his side to state that they made no objection to the other side producing Mrs. li Hon on this suit, and would waive all objections and interpone no barrier to it, although she was an imcompetcnt witness under the statute. They consented on their part that the other side could use Mrs. 1 Uton as a witness 11 lliey oesirea to do so. Mr. Evarts said it had never lieen a so- rious question with them whether Mrs. Tiiton would be a witness, as they knew the law was against it; that if Mrs. Tiiton could at any time have been admitted there were grave questions to be consider ed, and that if his.client needed any fur ther evidence It would ne his duty to ad duce such evidence. They had not been brought to any point in which they were led to consider the force of the evidence. Mr. Besch said that in his view of the policy of law counsel was mistaken in the intent of the law as to the propriety of allowing a wite to defend herself. It was not the policy oi tne law to loroid mat, but he only mentioned this matter first bo that if counsel derired to produce this lady they were at perfect liberty to do so. Evarts said he did not believe the con sent of counsel in opposition to the law made a wife s competent witness. Judge Keilson said there was no ques tion about the allowability of the other side to offer this lady as a witness. It would be a very trying position for her, and on the whole he was glad the lady was not ottered as a witness. The Court hers took Us usual recess. After recess Charles C. Stanter and G. W. Maddox were called in rebuttal. They miifird that li ton was not with Mrs. Wood hull in the Bossel procession. John Swinlon was next called and testified : I reside in New York and am connected with Theodore Tiiton, and knew him in 1871. I also knew Mrs. Woodhull and Miss Claflin by tight. I remember Kossel procession, and was in it in the company with Tiiton. We walked arm in arm. 1 joiueu tuc prucesmun av cigiuo a-reet, and Tiiton was with an old gentle man wnoni 1 thing ne introduces to ma as Mr. Gregory. I did not see Mrs. Woodhull or Miss Clalln during the pro cession, niton was witn me dur ing the whole line of march, and we were walking arm in arm tne whole time. When the procession ended I went with Tiiton and ws parted at f ourteenth Btreet and union square, and I did not then see Mrs. Woodhull or Miss Claflin. Cross-examined i I did not suppose, when 1 went to the procession, that Til- ton would be in it. . I was surprised to sea him there. . Beach, at this point, said if it would be convenient to the qthers some members pf the jury would like an early adjournment. Adjourned till Monday morning. A new planet was discovered by Per-rotipotir8lh of April, FOBEI6N. EaeLA. TERRJBLI COLLIERY KlrLOSIOK. LoNDoir, Msy 1 I A. M. A terrible explosion occurred yesterday afternoon in the Bunker.' Hill colliery, North Staf ford! hire, while the miners were at work. At midnight twelve bodies had been taken out Twentylhree men are yet in tbe mine. There is no hope that any of them will ne recovered auve. ARMS BKABJMO LAW AMD TBI RIPII MATCH. In the House of Commons last evening Sullivan renewed bis inquiry whether members of the American team who were coming to Ireland to take part la the international rine contest would be ex empted from the obligation of the law forbidding the carrying of arms. Kir Michael 11. Beach. Chief Secretary lor Ireland, said arrangements had been made to prevent anv interference with the i ;s . ...i ,k.. ....... i.l l,.. no reason to complain of the operation of this or auy other law. Wratner Probabilities. Washinoton, May 11 A. M. For New England, clear weather aud westerly winds during the day, with slight changes in temperature and ruing barometer. For the Middle and South Atlantic Slates, clear and warmer weather during a portion of the day, followed by winds shifting to easterly and southerly, falling barometer and light rains during the afternoon and evening. For the Gulf Slates, Tennessee and the Ohio Valley, rain, with southeast to southwest winds, slight changes in tem perature and falling barometer during the day. For the Lake region, oool and cloudy weather and rain in the Upper Lake region during the day, extending over the Lower Lake region during the afternoon or evening, with northerly to easterly winds and falling barometer. For the Upper Mississippi and Lower Missouri valleys, rain or snow, lollowed by partly cloudy and cold weather, with northerly to westerly winds and rising barometer during the night. BY MAIL AND TELEGRAPH. Oliver Cliarlick, late Police Commis sioner of Hew York, died yesterday. Spanish gold to the amount of $884,000 Was shipped Iroiu lien xork for Havana yesterday. Officer Beibseuver. shot by Connell. near Wilkesbarre. Pa.. Thursday, has since died. Two children named Long perished in a burning dwelling in Estill county, Ky., TVeunesday. The winning horses in the Jockev Club races at Galveston yesterday were Coriander and EHa Harper. The Leighton Iron works, at East Rochester, New York, were blowu down yesterday. Loss $50,000. The rush of visitors to Florida the past season has been unprecedented, the total number being estimated at 33,000, The owners of the poisoned cargo of salt brought to New York hope that 75 per cent of it may be found free from arsenic. Of eighteen fishing boats which were out in the gale ot I'huraduy, on st, Joseph, Mich., three were lost, with eleven men on board. The ice in Mackinaw Straits ia broken up, and it is believed (hat steamers can now get through the north channel withr out difficulty. Ex-State Treasurer Isaac Brandt, of Iowa, has been found guilty of embeule- uient of $1000, Seven more indictments against Brandt are pending. Vice President Wilson visited the Gov ernment Depot at JetTersonville, Indiana, yesterday, and was much astonished at its magnitude and appointments. A passenger train was ditched on the Atlantic and Great Western railway, near Meadville, Pa., Wednesday, and three or four passengers severely injured. A barge laden with iron, bound from Ontario to Charlotte, was abandoned dur ing a gale inursday, ana is supposed to have been lost, with four persons, Judges Brooks and Lick, in their charges to grand juries in North Caro- I J-..I .1 ,1 una, unvu upuiareii inu uriuiiiiai leaiures of the Civil Bights act unconstitutional, as no law could say men are socially equal, Vast beds of ore have been discovered near Fort Scott, Kansas, which yields a very malleable metal, absut the color of nickel. Ihe blacksmiths in the neighborhood heat it in their furnaces, and use it for horse shoe nails. Bobert Fratier. a verv nonular notice officer of Nashville, was shot and killed yesterday by a negro named Joe Reed, who was engaged in whipping bis wile, which Frasier tried to interfere with. Reed was arrested and will probably be lynched, as the excitemeut oyer the affair is very great. Ohio. Potato bugs are reappearing. About 9000 miners are now on a strike in the State. Farmers are getting short of fodder and stock iB placed on short commons. Bellefontaine la endeavoring to secure the location of the Northwood college. - John Mathers, a rjrominent lawyer nf Sidney, died Ihursday, of consumption. General A. E. Burnside was once an ap prentice to John c. lJuncan, a Aenia tailor. D, H. Means, a prominent stove mer chant of Cincinnati, died yesterday of apoplexy. David D, Taylor, of the Guernsey Times, has been appointed postmaster at vamDnage, A farmer plowed up a gold watch re cently near Bellaire. It was a little rusty, but kept time. Twentyfive thousand dollars was sub scribed to the Scioto Valley railway at cmiucoine inursday. A beminist having made bold to start a saloon in Oberlin, the whole town haB set to work to pray him out. All the departments of Cartwright, Mc- Curdy St Co.'s new iron mill at Youngstown, were started up on Monday. The growing wheat is not so badly in jured in Clarke county as was supposed. The yield win, however, be considerably reduced. The strike in the Cambridge coal mines has been completely wiped out, colored miners from Virginia having replaced tbe Strikers. R. W. Allison esq., formerly local editor of the Steubenville Herald, has been appointed Private Secretary to Governor Koutt, ot Colorado. - The Defiance Machine Works turns out $75,000 worth of bub and spoke machine ry, steam engines, boilers, mill gearing, plows, etc., annually. Boston Corbett, the cavalryman who shot Wilkes Booth, is making hats in Cleveland. He was four months a pris oner at Anoersonvitis. Hon. Abraham Simmons, an old rest dent of Noble county, for many years County Treasurer, and Senator and Brn-reaentative of his district, died suddenly at uaioweii, ea 1 uesday, aged Oa years. The trustees of the Southern railroad have awarded to the Baltimore Bridge company the contract to build a bridge over the Kentucky river. 1 he bridge is 276 feet high, 1200 long, and will coat $377,600. The daughter of M. Kelting. at Penin sula, three miles from Sandusky, while drawing water from a well Thursday, fell in Head Bret and drowned, nhe waa in the water an lour before found. She waa sixteen years old. A train oa the Paineaville and Youngs town Narrow Gauge railway was blown from the track near Wilson's Corners Wednesday. The cars were blown com pletely from .the Irack and turned over upon tne side, bul were not badly wrecked, No one was seriously hurt. At a meeting of friends and officers of the Bpringhsld, Jackson and Pomemy narrow usnge railway in Cincinnati, Wednesday, it waa resolved that work would not be begun until $900,000 bad been subscribed. The road is just one hundred miles in length, and if the sum named is subscribed a bonded debt of not more than $500,000, or $6000 per mile, will be necessary. The amount thus far subscribed ia $028,000. vYaalalairloa. The President mav so to his farm in Missouri belore he goes to Long Branch The Cabinet was in session but a short time yesterday. Ail the members were present except Delano and Jewell. No business of importanos was considered The moiety system has not been entire ly abolished, as has been supposed. The repeal only relates to moieties derived from violations of the customs revenue laws, and does not include the posto&ice and some or tbe branches of the service. There is about $6,500,000 worth of sil ver bullion in the mint. All the branch es will be kept running closely in coining large and small pieces, and silver coins to the aggregate amount stated will probably be struck on during the year. These coins are to be issued in place of the present fractional currency, as provided by the law of January 14, 1870. Fires. The lighthouse at Port Maitland, On tario, was burned down Thursday night. The Douglass woods, near Sutton, Mass., are on hre, and 700 acres have been burned over. Two flouring mills and several tenement houses were burned at Watertown, New x orK, yesterday. Loss $oo,000. Foreign. The festival at Nagasaki. Japan, in commemoration of the events in Formo sa, continued three days, with great spirit. Her Majesty Victoria has authorized tbe continuation of the word "Niagara" on the colors of the 100th regiment. where it waa originally put to commemo rate an event of 1813, ADDITIONAL CITY NEWS. Local Personal. Hon. T, E. Cunningham, of Lima, ia in the city. Senator Thurman arrived in the city last night,- and is stopping at (he Net1 House, t. ..... Edwards Pierrepont, the new Attorney General, studied law In this city with Judge P. B. Wilcox, and practiced here several years. Bev. Dr. E. L. Bexford has been regu- arly elected pastor of the Universaiiat Church in San Francisco, for one year from the first of April last, at a salary of thirtysix hundred dollars in gold. S. GuBderfer, Thomas Joqvet, Albert Herch, M. Clements, Wm. punn, Cincin. nnti; L. L. Cantwell, Coshocton; Senator Paul, Knox county; James M. Hull, Cleveland; J, M. Barr, Circleville; T. E, Punniiighaip, ima; Jay Blchley, Marys- yille, are stopping at the American House. : Among the arrivals aj the Neil Ilouse last night were G. B. Johnson, Granville; W. H. Lewis, Cincinnati; W. T. Carey, Xenia; B. M. O'Ferrall, Kenyon College; C. M. Nichols and wife, Springfield; A. H. Massey, Henry Eichardson, Ira A- Martin, Cleveland; Charles L. Olds, Springfield; John Gwynn, W. P. Noblei E. Seney, Tiffin; James Murray, Sidney' D. W. Brown, Sandusky. Dr. E. S. Breyfogle has started for Cal ifornia, and expects to join his brother in San Jose. He carries with him the hearty good wishes of his young friends in Co lumbus. When Pr. Breyfogle looks upon the beauty and vast extent of San Fran cisco, it will require all his confidence in parental veracity to enable him to realize that when his father, Councilman Charles Breyfogle, was there, the city contained only about half a doten houses. Coun: oilman Breyfogle was a "fortyniner." TrannlRilon. A business man in this city received a letter the other day from an ice dealer in Michigan, ordering ice tools. The letter was written in German, and business man could not read a word of it. A German friend across the way was appealed to and brought into requisition in the capacity of translator. After reading the letter forward, backward, crosswise, upside down and every other way, he explained to the dealer, "Well, it says C. O. D. Dat means coom on tirectly," and a smile beamed on his countenance at his wonderful powers in Ihe translation line as Aurora illumines the heavens, Colnmuns and Toledo. President M, M, Greene met twenty or thirty prominent gentlemen of Toledo at the Boody House Thursday evening, in in informal way, to present the situation of the Columbus and Toledo Bailroad company. Mr. Greene said that tbe com. pany held written contracts for eightyfive miles of the right of way, leaving thirty five to be obtained at a cost of about $90, uuu, jn Columbus, sixtylour persons had subscribed $410,000; the greatest part of this was subscribed before the panic, and fully $200,000 of it by persons who bad been crinnled bv the financial nrpss. ure. The stockholders had instructed the Board to make strenuous exertion to raise the subscription to $1,000,000 by the 1st of June, and failing in that to abandon the road and release the su bscribers. Mr. Greene expressed his confidence that the road oould be built if $40,000 could be raised in Columbus and $60,000 in Toledo. He spoke of a feeling in Toledo that the new road waa a neoestity to the Hocking Valley, and that that corporation would build it; but he remarked that al though Ihe connection was an important one, ine nocaing valley was not so anxious for it as they were two veara aio. having secured connections with Toledo wnicli were not anticipated two years ago; but still th.y hsd raised $200,000, which uwy coosiaerea ineir mil snare. Mr. Greene declared there waa no lien- combs ia tbe resolution to abandon the road unless the million dollars were raised. It simply meant that the road must fsil or succeed now. There would be no dif ficulty in raising the $40,000 in Columbus, if the $00,000 could be aeeund ia Toledo; if that failed, then Columbus would not respond. The failure or success of the road thus rested with Toledo. arrlasre Lkeana. The following marriage licenses have been issued during the past week : Charley Frill and Lucy Sampson, John F. Hanchard and Martha' Fickle. John H. Greene and Eiitabeth A. McDonald, Otto Both and Mary Werner, Jacob Zimnier and Mary Zimnier, Thomas H.Thomas and Margaret Price. Meal t-alaie Tama.ler. Deeds have been filed in the Recorder's office since our last report as follows : Tbe city of Columbus to John H. Hunt, lot 17 in tbe City addition to the city of Columbus, July 3. 1874, for $3465. n. nation to John II. Hunt, lot of Addison Watson's addition to the city af Columbus. March 24. 187ft. for 11200. hvan K. (iriliiilb. to Frerin-ixlr Millar mw, Charles L. B salty, south-east quarter of lot 290 of M. L Sullirant's Western addition to Columbus, April 30, UTS, for $400. Asa Litermore and George W. Ogden to n.ura uguen, t acres ol laud In Sharon township. Anril 27. 1876. for t'iuuo. Asa L. Parker to James T. Arnett. lot 10 in Asa L. Parker's subdivision of a part of lot 5 of Stevenson's subdvision in the city of vw.uiuh -luicucr i, IOI, lor Asa L. Parker to J. T. Arnetl, lot 11 in Asa I. Parker's subdivision of part of lot 5 of SteveusoD's subdivision in tbe city of Co- iumuuB, ainiiu ioid, rorf33U. Henry E. (Jill to Itebecca Kingsley, lot 24 iu neury a. uiu s aauition to tbe city ot Columbus, March 31, 1876, fur $075, W illiam T. Delashmatt to Leroy W. Budd, 75 seres qf laud in Perry township, February 28, 1875. for $6500. Louis Oorrieri to John Walsh, 10 feet off the south side of lot 1 of William Miii-hell'i subdivision of John Short's subdivision of lots sand Tot lot 6 of W. G. Desbler's addition to the city of Columbus, April 27. 1U7K avnl.nAnr A. r ' cAtunuuo ui jiupar.y una .1. New Advertisements. Has removed his LAW OFFICE to tbe 8. E. Cor. of State and Hlah Sireeie. Over (he Banking House of Ids St Co. myl 3m FARM FOB SALE On Long Time with Annual Payment. THE RODNEY COMSTOCK FARM, four miles from the corporation line of this city, on tbe Worthington road, containing 70 acres of improved land, beautifully located, handsome house, goodout-build-iogs, fences, elc , one of the most desirable residences in the county. Inquire of O. E. tHiKH, Administrator, K. MAIN, 12 and 14 North High street, and Commercial Bank. myl s aw it GRAND OPENING And Free Lunch at 123 and 127 FAST FRIEND STREET. Oa Sntardny Evening:, Hay 1, At I F. X, HAVING ADDED THE LARGE ROOM, No. 123 East Friend street, to mr pres eut accommodations, will open as above with a Bug Fxreo Xj u. xo. o la. 1 Andaaplendid Musical Kntcrtaiument,choice Liquors and Uoster's Beer. AH are invited to come. SMIL A. SELBACH, ap30 2t Proptietor. ATTACHMENT.'' Titos. B. Potts 4 Son 1 Before John B. Grove, v. j.r., r ranmin Coun- Conrad Dillis. J ty, Ohio. ON THE 30th DAY OF MARCH. A. D. 1875, 1 issued an order of attachment iu tbe above entit'ed action for the sum of $24.10. JOHN H. GROVE, J. P. Columbus, O., April 29, 1875. myl 1 14 ATTACHMENT. F. Wohlleben ) Before J. H. Grove, J. P, v. t of Franklin County, John Todd. J Ohio. rvN THE FOURTH DAY OF FEBRU- J ARV. A. D. 1875. 1 issued an order of attachment in tbe above entitled actioD, for the sum of $57.10. JOHN H. GROVE, J. P. Columbia, April 29, 1875. myl 3 10 D00K, SASH and LUMBER CO. - MANUFACTURERS OP BUILDERS' MILL WORK, AND nSALS IN I j XJ 31 U 13 I, LATH AND BHINeLEg, Stair Work, Counters, Store Fitting and Turning dona to order. WE ARE SELLING LUMBER AND Mill Work at greatly reduced prices, and we (ball keep our figures at the lowist in the market. Lumber seasoned Dy tne neacn process. Factory dr Yard Went Brond Street. ap24 eod 6m lor4p FIELD BROS & CO WHOLESALE IN MANUFACTURERS insurance, Railroad & Transportation Cm GLASS ADVERTISING SIGNS roa IVIET BUSINISB. No. 1SX South XXltYli, . (Over Ohio Furniture Co.) je!8 1 or 4p ly FOR S ua. Xj El! At our new salesrooms, MOS). 147 aad 148 WENT FOURTH ST., (Between Race and Elm) CINCINNATI, O, Thn Largest Stock of Carriages In tbe city, including the Latest Styles for Spring and Summer use, We Call Special Attention to our improved Sidebar Wagon, the stand ard ot excellence. Bend turcircuiar. J. W. GOSLING. a20 3m lor4p Factory cor. 61b t Sycamore. si. CLAY BK.IGGS, Attorney at Law and Notary Pnbllc, Odtoo Building, first stairs south of P. 0 ELLIOTT JONES & Booksellers and Stationers, 47 NOTJTII HIGH STBEET, OOLUMBUS, OHIO, Wealsl reepectlnllr call alteatiost ( the loUevTiaf laetas NEW BOOKS. All new Books nwivrd hv avtirM frnin New York on tbe day of publication Rnoka not in stock ean us supplied very quickly, ss we have express packages from hew York almost every uay. CREDIT. W'a give credit to responsible nartieannlv. and as we loose nothing by this, can afford to sell goods as low as auy. We make special discounts to cash trarchnsers, and wish it koowo that we CANNOT BK UNUKRaOLD. For proof of tbia we invita examination and comparison. PICTURES. A fllll tte.Miioil af Rtfl Enfrrftvincr. nnrl Praoir'i fine Floral Ciossei and Uotioei tnar ba Been at our itore, at price, at low as they can be told. Ibe new gold and silver Wire Picturt Cord.wbiuh will not break, supplied to those who buy pictures and frames. Office Stationery. All kinds of first-class Office Stationery kept on baud in large quantities, such as Blank Books. A fine assortment. All ledgers sunulied with Arden's patent index, whereby much time is saved in posting. Call and etamine them. Dixon's Lead Pencils. We are sole agents tor Dixon's American Graphite Pencils for Central Ohio. These pencils are fast taking the place of Faber's in tbe American Market, and all who have tried them use them in preference to Faber's. Call and examine them. REMEMBER CENTRAL BOOK STORE, Next Door to the Old 3STO. 47 SOUTH .I'!., ' . Columbus, Oliio. ' ap?8 w s 11 O 13 'V. JL. G Jk W Xa 3 11, LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S W i k Malcer, AKD DUMB TS HUMAN IIAIXl GOODS, 7T K. TOWM si'., oolanabna, O. JseT-Cash paid for Human Hair. . oc!6 dawly la4p PETER SMART'S MACHINE SHOP t'OMJMBCS, OHIO. MANUFACTURER OF ENGINES, ALL kinds of Machinery, Jail Work, Rail- intra and U rati dim. All kinds of Brewers' Fixtures. Ord its solicited from all parts of tha country. . ., . ian22 6m lortp AUorney-at'Law, Notary Public, and Qtmral Cok NO. 5 NOR I It UIUH STREET. TIROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO 17 business Id bis oare. Haviutr connec tion with collecting agencies East and West, cati make collections at cheapest rates. Re iCTaby permission to W ALrfciK MUKfunuri, Keal rotate Agent. apiddm TEASDALE'S DIE HOUSE, 205 WALMITST., Cincinnati, O. ' ' Getifs' and Ladiet' Garments Cleaned & Dyed &SenA stamp for Book containing price list, useful information regarding colors and Hints on Dry Goods. aulo lylor4p United States Mail. OHIO. P03TOFFICE DEPARTMENT, ' ) Wahhinqton, March ill, 1876. J PROPOSALS WILL BE RECEIVED AT THE Con tine t Office of this Department until 3 o'aloek p. m. of Mav 31, 1876 (to be deoided on' or before June 10, 187), for carrying the mails of the United States from July 1, 1875, to June 10, 1870, on the following routes in the State of Ohio, and by the schedule ol departures and ar rivals Herein specinoa, vis; OHIO. Service 1875 to 170. 9217. From Harrisonvllle to Dexter, 8 miles mid bnck. once a week. Leave llarrisonville Saturday at 10 a mi arrive at Dexter by VI m; leave uexier oaturuay ai (am; arrive nt nnr rinonville by 0 a in. Bond required with bid, $100. ' 9525. From Streetshorough to Earhflle, miles flndback.aix times a week. Leave Streets-borough daily, except Sunday, at u a m; arrive at Karlville by It) a m; leave Earl vi lie daily, except Sunday, ot 1 p mi arrive at streets bo rough by 2 n in. laoud required with bid, tiw, 9540. From R itch Held Center, by Berkev, to Syivmtn, 1" miles and back, twice a week l.nnve Hiohfleld Center Tuesday and Saturday at Sam; arrive at Sylvania bylU:3tami leave Sylvan! a Tuesday aud Saturday at I p m; Arrive at Kioimeiu veuier uy p ui. aoaa required with bid, $.200. 9568. From Allensvllle to McArthur.7 miles and bacK, twice a ween. L-eflve Auensvnie Wednesday and Saturday at 7 a mi arrive at Mo Arthur bv 9 a m; leave McArthur Wednesday and Saturday at 3 p m; arrive at Allensville by 6 pm. Bond required with bid, BSHG. From Utica. bv Homer and Look, to Centerburgh, 14 miles and back.threo times a week. Leave Utica Tuesday, Thursday aud Saturday at 8 a m; arrive at Centerburgh by 12 m; leave Centerburgh Tuesday, Thursday and Baturduy at 1 p mi arrive at Utica by 6 p in. Bond required with bid, $600. u(iT. From D-xter City, by Crooked Tree, Keith's. Hidae, Claytona and Crooked Tree. -to Dexter City, equal to 12 miles and back, three times a ween, uvava jwciier uuy meaiiay, Thursday and Saturday at 9 a m; arrive at Dexter City by 3 p m. Bond required with bid, 4100. 9688. From Dexter City to Fulda,7milesand back, tnree umei a wee. L.eave Dexter city iuesaHy, ahuibuwy uu oiuiiruay a v a m, arrive at Fulda bv 11 a in; leave Fulda Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 12 m; arrive at Dexter City by 2 p m. Bond required with bid, $300. 05)9. From Watertown. by Churchtown, to Marietta, t miles and back, twice a week. Leave Watertown Wednesday end Saturday at Tarn; arrive at Marietta by lo a mi leave Marietta Wsdnsiday and Saturday at 1 p mi arrive at CO., WRITING FLUID. All principal kinds of Writing Fluid kept in slock.esptcially Stafford's Chemical Fluid, equal to Arnold's in every respect, as ws can satisfy sll who choose to call. Stafford t Combined Writing and Copying Fluid is th. best Copying Ink in tbe market, Arnold's, Carter's Hover's and French Copying Inks also kept on hand . JET BLACK INK, We also keep a Jet Black Ink for those who want an ink te writs black when first used. CARMINE INK Tbe best quality of pure Carmine Fluid, put up in fiat bottles which do not tip over . Call and see them. WRITING PAPERS. A large atoak of both fancy and staple pa" , ners aud envelopes just received, including . Ihe new LINEAR PAPKTKKlhS aud the , Pretty Papcterles, containing both granite and repp paper. ENVELOPES. Business men will do well to examine onr stock of LITHOGRAPHED Envelopes. We receive orders for envelopes, with linn name and business card Lithographed thereon, almost as cheap as the ordinary printed en velopes are sold, call and see them, , CROQUET. Our summer sunnlv of Croonet is in. Make your selection while Ihe slock ia large and complete.' . THE PLACE, ' ,J Postofflce Arcade, ', XZIOXZ STHiaET, WntRrtown by 4 d m. Bond reauired with bid. 1300. wo. rrom soutn Bioomneid. nv Bt. rau . to Mircy, 11 mi let nd back, twice a week. Leave- So uth Bloomfleld Wednesday and Saturday atl p m; arrive at Marcy by 4 p m; leave Marcy Wednesday and Saturday at T a m; arrive at South Bloomrteld by 10 am. Bona required w tb bid. .31.0. 0571. From Attiea, by Omar, Reedtown aux Bismarck, to Urban, 11 miles and back, six limes a week. Leave Attica daily, except Sun-day, at 9 a m; arrive at Havana by lit m; leave Llavana daily, except Sunday, at 1 p mi arrive at Attioa by 4 pm. Bond required with bid ,$700. 9bl2, From Oxford, by Morning Sun, to Fair Baven, H miles and buck, six times a week. Leave Oxford daily, except Sunday, at 9 a m, arrive at Fair Haven by 12 m; leave Kair Haven usuy, except ounamy, ai o.m a mi arrive at ui- lora uy o ou n n Bond reauired with bid, $708. U3i3. f rom unagrin runs, oy uunseii in. o.j nnd north Kuse:l (a. o.), to Chester Cross Roads, 8 miles and back, six times a week. Leave Chagrin Fulls daily, except Sunday, al U;3J a m; arrive at Chester Cross Roads by 1:30 Dm; leave Chester Cross Roads dnily.exoept Sunday, at a-UU a m; arrive at Chagrin Falls by lu:30 am. Bond required with bin, $509, , 9574. Fro rii New Burlington, by tlur ney villa (n. o.) to Wilmington, M milea and back, twice a week. Leave New Burl mi ton Tuesday and Saturday at 2 p m; arrive at Wilmington by 6 p ni; leave Wilmington Tuesday and SAturday at 9 a m; arrive at New Burlington by 12 m. Bond required with bid, 1300. n.iffi o.) and Johnson's Mills (. o), to Nobleville, JO miles and back, ouce a week. Leave Lvaon'i rroin xjson b, oy tvacttiev s eioren. Saturday At 8 a m; arrive at Nobleville by 11 a in; leave iobioviiie (Saturday at iz mi arrive at Dyson's by 3 p m. Bond required with bid, $100. U57U. From Little Sandusky to Wyandot, 5) miies and back, once a week.' Leave Little San-dusky Saturday at 9 am, arrive at Wyandot by 19:30 a m; leave Wyandot Saturday at 7 a m; ar rive at Li tie Sandufky by ,80 a m.( Bond re- 9577. From Point Marbtehead. bv Marble head, to Daubury, 8 milea and back, three times a weea, jjtave roint MAimeneaa jues i day, Thursday and Saturday at 1 a hi; arrive at iMnbury by 9:30 a m; leave Danbury Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 10 a m; arrive at Point Marblehead by U:30 p ai. Bond required with bid, $300. ( . 9578. From Cincinnati, oy uaiuornia, sweet Wine. New Palestine. New Richmond. Point Pleasantand Moscow, to Felicity, 36 miles and back, six times a week. Leave Cincinuati daily, except Sunday, at 6 a m; arrive at Felicity by i2 in! leave Felicity daily, except Sunday.at 1 p mi arrive at Cincinnati by 8 p ni. Bond required with bid, $3100, 9579. From Moscow, by Neville, Chilo, Smith's Landing, Higginsport and Lavanna, to nipiey, m nines tuia ohck, mre unit n wour. Leavo Moscow Tueaday.Thur&day aad Sntnrday at 6 a m; arrive at Ripley by 1 p ni, leave Ripley Mondnv. Wednesday and Friday at 6 a m; arrive At Moscow by 1 p m Boud required with bid, $800. 96iO. From Manchester, by Vineyard Hill and Stout's, to Vunceburgh (Ky.), 19 miles and back, thiee timeB a week. Leave Manchester Tuesduv, Thursday and Saturday at 6 am; ar- rie at vanceDurgn tiy ia mt reave vanceourgn Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 1 p m; arrive at Manchester by 7 p in. Bond required with bid, $i 00. I'OSl. from ronsmouin, uy rri;iiusiiiiJ,ruiiu Run and Freentone, to Vtinceburgh (KfOi 2s miles and bnck, three limes a week Leave Pnrtumotith Tnesiinv. Thursday and Saturday at fl ami arrive at Vunceburgh by 12 mi leavo Vanceourgn Tuesony, in u ran ay ana naiuraay at 1 p m.; arrive at Portsmouth by 7 p tn. Bond reqiureo witn uia, ow. Unfi2. From Ironton. bv Coal Grove. Sheridan Coal Works, South Point, Burlington and Rock-wood, to Huntington (W. Va.), 23 miles and hank, three times a week. Leave Ironton Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 0 am; ar rive at Huntington by V m; leave Huntington Tuesday, Thurriday , and Saturday at lp arrive at Ironton by 7 p m. Bond reauired wi bid, $700. For laws relation to the postal service, forms of proposal , bond And certificate, and for instructions and conditions to beembraoedin the contract, tee advertisement of thiB date in pamphlet form, to be found at the termini of each route, or address tbe Second Assistant Poatrr aster General. Bids should be sent in scaled envelopes, superscribed "Mail Proposal?, State of Ohio,' and addressed to the Second Assistant Post master General, Washington. D. C. aprlO ltaw fit Postmaster General. PH. J. HIIOMEH, Noe. 270 and 274 South Fourth Street, COIXMHim, OHIO, : General Agent for the Celebrated Grossius Ventilation Furnace, And School House Stove, Also, for the Improved Alligator Goal Cook Stove, Patented 1874. Dealer in ail kinds of Oooking and Heating Stoves, Galvanized Iron Work, Tin.Oop-per and Iron Ware, nov26 eod ly .flays, ana nunareai s,j ivw

fell p0 VOL. XXXVI. COLUMBUS, SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1875. NO. 101. SIEBERT & LILLEY, Blank Bool Manufacturers. Printers, Binders, Stationer And Legal Blank Publishers. BOOK BINDING Of every description, by tbe ingle Volume. Kditlon or OPF.BA HOUSE BCII-DESG, (Up Suite.) mrtO COU'WBtm. Ohio Merchant Tailoring Co., MERCHANT TAILORS, 110 DIALERS II Wonts' Fine Furnishing Goods, No. 168 80CTI1 HIBH ST., , (Opera Home Block), COLUMBUS, 0. JNO. RICH, Supt and Treat. , S. W. 8TIMS0N, Foiemau. myl ly BROWN & CO., Fashionable Hatters. Bilk suit Felt. all tub latest SPRINGSTYLES SOLK AGENTS FOR The most perfect fitting Shirt in the market, in stock and made to order, for $12 end $15 per half dozen, ap30 tf No. 5 Nell House Block. Office! Hiffb, Pearl ami Chnpel Sts. j. ii. coult. a. w ra.Noiaco. COMLY & FRANCISCO, PCBLISHIBS AMP PRiJPKlKTOaH. JAMEN M. OOWI.Y, Rain to-day, Kith southtail to toulhweti winds, flight change) in Umptratun and falling barometer. The Colorado beetle, so-called, does not trouble Colorado. Its peculiar bless-iugs are reserved for other parts. The defense, in the Bcecher trial, concluded its testimony yesterday and rested its case. It was then proposed by the prosecution that Mrs. TUton should be called, but Mr. Evarts, in behalf of the defense, objected. The prosecution then proceeded to call its rebutting witnesses. , Subscripiions to the Soioto Valley railway are still actively taken along the proposed line. The project is taken hold of with enthusiasm by the people interested, and its prospects are improving every day. The time to push matters is now, and no time should be lust or necessary effort neglected. The tide is rising that will carry this enterprise on to suc-oess if taken at the flood. The total number of pieces of mail matter of all classes originating at the postorBces in the Ohio towns named be-jow during the four weeks commencing January 11, 1875, was as follows: Akron, 65,652; Canton, 42,689; Hamilton, 41,-339: Mansfield, 74,040; Mt. Vernon, 20,- 377; Portsmouth, 25,633; Sandusky, 34,- 802- Springfield, 78,880; Bteuhenviiiei 29.569: Youngstown, 37,129; Zaneaville, ' Vice President Wilson'. Movements, Louisville, April 30. Vice President Wilson arrived in Me city to-aay, ana durinr the dar has received a large num ber of calls from prominent gentlemen of Doth political parties, lo-mgui uu in siven a reception by General Harlan, and to-morrow goes to Frankfort as guest of Colonel Stoddart jonnaon. r rom r raiiK-fort he will go to Lexington to visit Hon, John C. Breckenridge, who, as Vice Presi dent, nreaidod over the Senate during one ol Mr. Wilson's earlier terms. He will anend Sunday in Lexington, and thence start on his Western trip, intending to ispend some time in California. A faeicneel crew Again Mi Ian recked Kam Francisco, April 30. The bark- online Maroiua. thirtytwo days from Tahiti, reports the capsiiing of the .schooner Margi.net Crockard, from Tahiti ,te this port, having oh board the officers and crew of the British ship Airey Force, wrecked on the passage from Australia to San Francisco. Sixteen were drowned, the remainder, with Captain Godfrey, of the iCrockard, and Captain Collier, of the Airey f orce, arrived at Janm. The break in the works for the preserva tion of the falls at Minneapolis lias been nearly stopped by employing one hundred men night and day, and no further present danger is apprehended. The break occurred on the east side at a place where the limestone Is but twelve to eighteen inehee thick, and washed a hole sixteen to twenty feet across through the decom posed rock to the old tunnel, emptying below the lower falls. Miss Ida Lillian Greeley, daughter of tbe late Horace Ureeley, will be married to uolonet Nicholas smith, of Kansas, today. Tbe bridal party will sail for En' gland on the Abyssinia immediately after the ceremony. Smith graduated with high honors from Bufus Choate'e class at Cambridge, and is a promising young .lawyer. A. -naha dispatch of Thursday says 'Raven ,nni.,red returned California eml- . grants have arri.ed here in the last two BY TELEGRAPH TO TBE OBIO STATg JOURNAL ATHENS. ' The IMIen Trlnl-Piwrreae er the Bpefiial te ta Ohio but. Journal. Athens, 0., April SO. Thadeat ton g-etrelh, of Columbus, ttti6ed in the Mien trial to-day, telling hit experience during the greet strike. Thii afternoon ffu principally occupied in tbe aeirinr; of various men, who wanted to work at Neisonville, in April or May, 1874, tell the itory of their wrongs. All but oneof them connected Elder ion directly with their troubles. The defense ere now on so extensive a line that they will not finish to-day and may not to-uiornaw. LANCASTER. Suicide of a Faraltaro Dealer -Reel. Sr.ra ataraea. Special to the Ohio Bute Journal. Lancaster. 0.. April 30. A man named George DaTenport, who has been In the furniture business at Jew Lexington, attempted suicide there yesterday by cutting his throat. ihe residence of Jacob Moore, who re sides near Winchester, was destroyed by fire yesterday afternoon. Loss $1500. OSRKOSH FLEE. Blalyalao Banians atrnelures and rive Hundred Dwellings Uealroj. .d-Tbe t'urnt Dlalrlct to b. He-kalis Immediatei!- List at la.ui- aace Losses. Chicaoo, April 30. A special from Oshkosh says the prospect at that city is already brightening, and the prospects are that before winter a majority of the business blocks will be rebuilt. The debris is cleared away from the principal streets, which are thronged with visitors who have come to see the ruins from all directions. Insurance meu are present from all parts of the country. They do not take a discouraging view of the conflagration as a general thing, and not a few have de clared they will stand ready to renew their risks. 1 lie structures Durnea aown were generally Dretty well innnred. and are owned by men who can afford to rebuild. The vaults of the First National Bank were opened to-day and tbe contents found intact, gixtynine business structures were destroyed, and about half of the will be rebuic imediately. The police to-day made a careful count and find that, large and small, tbe sum total of dwellings destroyed is about live hundred. These are valued at an average i J500, which gives an aggregate loss of SI 250 oC "hicb is probably near the correct figure. The- loss on business houses is about Sl.OUu,??0' a.".d " 'umb1'!r interests from $200,000 to tto!y, mf kJ the insurance ia fully $1,000,000, or 40 per cent, of the loss. The agency that did the tnoBt busines' lost all their books, but have nearly arrived at the correct figures of their losses. Tbe following are the amounts sus tained by each of the companies, as nearly as the most diligeni inquiry can fix them. These are usually the figure! that will be forwarded to the main offices : Home of New York, $10,000; -Etna, Hartford, $80,000; North America, Philadelphia, $70,000; London, Liverpool and Globe, $80,000; Phoenix, Hartford, $46,1)00; 8uringlield, Massachusetts, Fire and Marine, $43,000; Continental, New York, $40,000; Northwestern National, of Mil waukee, S44,uuu; nortu British. Mer cantile, $30,000; Hartford, of Hart ford, SDU.uuui . new underwriters, $30 000; Allemania, Pittsburg, $25,-000; Madison Mutual, $28,000: PliaSDix, Brooklyn, t.'l.oou; JNiagara, ol r York, 17,UOU: Urtent, ol Hart ford, $10,600; German American, New York, $25,000: Lancashire, of England, $20,000; Penn, of Philadelphia, $10,000; Pennsylvania, $lo,UUO; tire Associa tion of Philadelphia, $15,000; , People's, of Memphis, St. Paul Fire and Marine, of Hartford, and the Atlas, of Hartford. SlO.OOOeach; Fire and Marine of Detroit, and Brewers, of Milwaukee, $8000 each: Citizen's, of Newark. flew Orleans Association, Franklin, of Wheel ing, Millville, JNew Jersey, 00W each; Home, ot (Joiumutt", tosuu; rianters, ot Memphis, Black River, of Watertown, New York, America, of Pittsburg, National, of Hartford, Fanenil Hall, Boston and franklin, ot Philadelphia $5000 each; St. Joseph, of Missouri, $3000; Traders, of Chicago, and Globe, of Chicago, $3000 each; Merchants, of New ark. $2000. Outside ol the lumber inter est the insurance is about fifty per cent. ot Josses. Among the heavy losers are James & Stille $90,000, insurance fil.uuu; it. u Begger S70.000. insurance SIO.UUU: McKev&Tolds $35,000: Clark & Forbes $30,000, insurance $21,000; S. M. Hoy & Brother $45,000: P. J. Watson w,uuu, insurance $10,000; Gill A Rogers $25,000. A relief oommittee has been organized. and substantial assistance for the afflicted is arriving from Fond du Lac and other neighboring cities. Last evening at a meeting of the Council the lire limits were nnsnea lorwara ui me uireuuuii miui which fire always threatens. The object is to take the 8a w and planing mills out of this locality. LOUISIANA. Sulla In Benair at tbe Stale to He- cover Meaeys raid (Iiuler JllegHl Vouelicrs. New Orleans. April 30 William P. Kellogg. Governor of the Slate of Louisi ana, represented by A. P. Field, Attorney General, has hied a petition in the oa lienor District Court against diaries Clinton. Auditor, and the securities on his special bond, Charles Menard, cnaries U. blaynaoic, yviinam union, J. ni Schwartz, and George C. Benliam, in Sa- lido, to recover judgment against saia Clinton for the sum of $279,783, the amount received from tax collectors in the vear 1873 unaccounted for, detained and' withheld by said Clinton; for the further sum of $60,300, the amount ille gally paid James Longstreet; for the further sum ol $40,i)t ine amount i era Iv taken from the tax col lectors by said Clinton and used by him. and for the further sum of $138,657 charged to be due tor illegally issuing six warrants to Ueorge w.pennam tor 500: James B. Wand for 814,872; E. W Dewees for $27,600; O. W. LowelJ for $14,278; James B. Matthews lor $14,bua and J. 11. Ug esbv for S39.407. The above warrants were lssnea unaer legislative voucher for appropriations for 1870. '71, '7 AO! MO. W ol 1874 and represented what was known as tiio Pinck ney Smith legislative vouchers for thepe years, tor warrants in pennon are con tained in the arllclei ot impeachment. Mr. H. K. List, of Wheeling, recently sold 250,000 pounds of wool at a single sale. It is claimed that tnis is tbe larg est single wool transaction that has ever taken place in the regions round about Wheeling. ' The price was not stated, fur ther than the mention of the fact that be told at decline from former otftri,- HERE WE REST. Teatiaaoay Concluded oa Ibe Part rihe lMeam. Beach Willing, Bit EvarU Beiasrt, U Call Kra. THUa. Tti FroaocutiDB Commencet IU Be butting Evidence. Adjournment Till Monday at the Request of Jurors. New York, April 80. Mr. Beecher was not preseut at his trial this morning, but his wife and son were. There wss'a noticeable increase of lookers on. The croaa-examinalion of Mr. Tracy was con tinued ss follows: 1 had a converaatioo with Mrs. Moulloa the Bight her hus band made his short statement before I he committee. I learned that night that the short statement had been proposed in stead of the long one, that Mrs. Moulton was instrumental in preparing it. (Shown a paper.) I presume this is the statement presented on the evening or August 1(1. Witness's attention was called to a con versation with Mrs. Moulton on the 10th of August, and witness said he under stood the conversation was confidential, aud be did not desire to make it known unless the Isdy should desire it. He said, however, it was not a conversation in which he, witness, was acting as coun sel for the lady. 1 had a conversation with Mrs. Moulton. but did not tell her be had saved the old man, nor advise her to burn her husband s long statement, telling her that if it were published it would sause her husband's ruin finan cially and socially. I never said to her to kick Tiltonout of the house and burn the document, as he would bring her family into trouble and disgrace. I ea Mr. Richards when he was before the committee. I did not ask him in the interview before be went before the committee if his sister admitted having committed adultery. He said he would com municate to uie nothing of what he knew in regard to the matter. I had an inter view with Bessie Turner at Mrs. Oving- ton's before she went before the committee. I met her for the first time that afternoon, and had a con vnrsatlon with her that evening in the parlor. I labored to have the documents extinguished and the scandal killed, so that it should never come to lile again. 1 will swear I did not labor to have the papers destroyed, though I labored to suppress the documents. Be-direct examination: I understood at tnis later stage that if the papers were destroyed it would add fuel to tbe flame, as part of them had already been published, t was a source of anxiety to me lest any of these papers should be destroy ed, and I made efforts to discover if any of them were destroyed. There was talk bet'a r8, Moulton and myself, after the Bacon letteT " out. l liu that would be done ttmi'.J .' this, matter came out. I remember an occasion on which I considered the subject ol getting an injunction to prevent ine papers being uesiroysa, i was alter niton s sworn statement was puuiiaueu n a conversation with Air. iticharas- when he was going before the committee told linn who 1 was, and that 1 would conduct his examination. He said he had notliiug to say, and would decline to answer any questions put to him by the committee on the ground that this was a family matter, and ho would not have it drawn out before the committee. I said he would be asked if his sister had committed adultery, and he made no answer or refused to answer it. It would put bis sister in a bad position. He thanked me for tliiB suggestion and then went before the committee and declined to appear before them for examination, aud then went off. Beecher was not a parly to the inter view between General Butler and myself on the 11th of August, at my lodging house. Beecher was nut in the house then, and I was not acting for him. In regard to the interview at the Fifth Avenue Hotel Beecher knew nothing about it. I was counsel for Woodrutt at Kohlnson Government matter which did not come to litigation. At no time in this examination have I given any informa tion about these litigations of the firm. Mr. f.varts here annouuoed that tne de fense rested. Mt. Beach rose and said it was due to his side to state that they made no objection to the other side producing Mrs. li Hon on this suit, and would waive all objections and interpone no barrier to it, although she was an imcompetcnt witness under the statute. They consented on their part that the other side could use Mrs. 1 Uton as a witness 11 lliey oesirea to do so. Mr. Evarts said it had never lieen a so- rious question with them whether Mrs. Tiiton would be a witness, as they knew the law was against it; that if Mrs. Tiiton could at any time have been admitted there were grave questions to be consider ed, and that if his.client needed any fur ther evidence It would ne his duty to ad duce such evidence. They had not been brought to any point in which they were led to consider the force of the evidence. Mr. Besch said that in his view of the policy of law counsel was mistaken in the intent of the law as to the propriety of allowing a wite to defend herself. It was not the policy oi tne law to loroid mat, but he only mentioned this matter first bo that if counsel derired to produce this lady they were at perfect liberty to do so. Evarts said he did not believe the con sent of counsel in opposition to the law made a wife s competent witness. Judge Keilson said there was no ques tion about the allowability of the other side to offer this lady as a witness. It would be a very trying position for her, and on the whole he was glad the lady was not ottered as a witness. The Court hers took Us usual recess. After recess Charles C. Stanter and G. W. Maddox were called in rebuttal. They miifird that li ton was not with Mrs. Wood hull in the Bossel procession. John Swinlon was next called and testified : I reside in New York and am connected with Theodore Tiiton, and knew him in 1871. I also knew Mrs. Woodhull and Miss Claflin by tight. I remember Kossel procession, and was in it in the company with Tiiton. We walked arm in arm. 1 joiueu tuc prucesmun av cigiuo a-reet, and Tiiton was with an old gentle man wnoni 1 thing ne introduces to ma as Mr. Gregory. I did not see Mrs. Woodhull or Miss Clalln during the pro cession, niton was witn me dur ing the whole line of march, and we were walking arm in arm tne whole time. When the procession ended I went with Tiiton and ws parted at f ourteenth Btreet and union square, and I did not then see Mrs. Woodhull or Miss Claflin. Cross-examined i I did not suppose, when 1 went to the procession, that Til- ton would be in it. . I was surprised to sea him there. . Beach, at this point, said if it would be convenient to the qthers some members pf the jury would like an early adjournment. Adjourned till Monday morning. A new planet was discovered by Per-rotipotir8lh of April, FOBEI6N. EaeLA. TERRJBLI COLLIERY KlrLOSIOK. LoNDoir, Msy 1 I A. M. A terrible explosion occurred yesterday afternoon in the Bunker.' Hill colliery, North Staf ford! hire, while the miners were at work. At midnight twelve bodies had been taken out Twentylhree men are yet in tbe mine. There is no hope that any of them will ne recovered auve. ARMS BKABJMO LAW AMD TBI RIPII MATCH. In the House of Commons last evening Sullivan renewed bis inquiry whether members of the American team who were coming to Ireland to take part la the international rine contest would be ex empted from the obligation of the law forbidding the carrying of arms. Kir Michael 11. Beach. Chief Secretary lor Ireland, said arrangements had been made to prevent anv interference with the i ;s . ...i ,k.. ....... i.l l,.. no reason to complain of the operation of this or auy other law. Wratner Probabilities. Washinoton, May 11 A. M. For New England, clear weather aud westerly winds during the day, with slight changes in temperature and ruing barometer. For the Middle and South Atlantic Slates, clear and warmer weather during a portion of the day, followed by winds shifting to easterly and southerly, falling barometer and light rains during the afternoon and evening. For the Gulf Slates, Tennessee and the Ohio Valley, rain, with southeast to southwest winds, slight changes in tem perature and falling barometer during the day. For the Lake region, oool and cloudy weather and rain in the Upper Lake region during the day, extending over the Lower Lake region during the afternoon or evening, with northerly to easterly winds and falling barometer. For the Upper Mississippi and Lower Missouri valleys, rain or snow, lollowed by partly cloudy and cold weather, with northerly to westerly winds and rising barometer during the night. BY MAIL AND TELEGRAPH. Oliver Cliarlick, late Police Commis sioner of Hew York, died yesterday. Spanish gold to the amount of $884,000 Was shipped Iroiu lien xork for Havana yesterday. Officer Beibseuver. shot by Connell. near Wilkesbarre. Pa.. Thursday, has since died. Two children named Long perished in a burning dwelling in Estill county, Ky., TVeunesday. The winning horses in the Jockev Club races at Galveston yesterday were Coriander and EHa Harper. The Leighton Iron works, at East Rochester, New York, were blowu down yesterday. Loss $50,000. The rush of visitors to Florida the past season has been unprecedented, the total number being estimated at 33,000, The owners of the poisoned cargo of salt brought to New York hope that 75 per cent of it may be found free from arsenic. Of eighteen fishing boats which were out in the gale ot I'huraduy, on st, Joseph, Mich., three were lost, with eleven men on board. The ice in Mackinaw Straits ia broken up, and it is believed (hat steamers can now get through the north channel withr out difficulty. Ex-State Treasurer Isaac Brandt, of Iowa, has been found guilty of embeule- uient of $1000, Seven more indictments against Brandt are pending. Vice President Wilson visited the Gov ernment Depot at JetTersonville, Indiana, yesterday, and was much astonished at its magnitude and appointments. A passenger train was ditched on the Atlantic and Great Western railway, near Meadville, Pa., Wednesday, and three or four passengers severely injured. A barge laden with iron, bound from Ontario to Charlotte, was abandoned dur ing a gale inursday, ana is supposed to have been lost, with four persons, Judges Brooks and Lick, in their charges to grand juries in North Caro- I J-..I .1 ,1 una, unvu upuiareii inu uriuiiiiai leaiures of the Civil Bights act unconstitutional, as no law could say men are socially equal, Vast beds of ore have been discovered near Fort Scott, Kansas, which yields a very malleable metal, absut the color of nickel. Ihe blacksmiths in the neighborhood heat it in their furnaces, and use it for horse shoe nails. Bobert Fratier. a verv nonular notice officer of Nashville, was shot and killed yesterday by a negro named Joe Reed, who was engaged in whipping bis wile, which Frasier tried to interfere with. Reed was arrested and will probably be lynched, as the excitemeut oyer the affair is very great. Ohio. Potato bugs are reappearing. About 9000 miners are now on a strike in the State. Farmers are getting short of fodder and stock iB placed on short commons. Bellefontaine la endeavoring to secure the location of the Northwood college. - John Mathers, a rjrominent lawyer nf Sidney, died Ihursday, of consumption. General A. E. Burnside was once an ap prentice to John c. lJuncan, a Aenia tailor. D, H. Means, a prominent stove mer chant of Cincinnati, died yesterday of apoplexy. David D, Taylor, of the Guernsey Times, has been appointed postmaster at vamDnage, A farmer plowed up a gold watch re cently near Bellaire. It was a little rusty, but kept time. Twentyfive thousand dollars was sub scribed to the Scioto Valley railway at cmiucoine inursday. A beminist having made bold to start a saloon in Oberlin, the whole town haB set to work to pray him out. All the departments of Cartwright, Mc- Curdy St Co.'s new iron mill at Youngstown, were started up on Monday. The growing wheat is not so badly in jured in Clarke county as was supposed. The yield win, however, be considerably reduced. The strike in the Cambridge coal mines has been completely wiped out, colored miners from Virginia having replaced tbe Strikers. R. W. Allison esq., formerly local editor of the Steubenville Herald, has been appointed Private Secretary to Governor Koutt, ot Colorado. - The Defiance Machine Works turns out $75,000 worth of bub and spoke machine ry, steam engines, boilers, mill gearing, plows, etc., annually. Boston Corbett, the cavalryman who shot Wilkes Booth, is making hats in Cleveland. He was four months a pris oner at Anoersonvitis. Hon. Abraham Simmons, an old rest dent of Noble county, for many years County Treasurer, and Senator and Brn-reaentative of his district, died suddenly at uaioweii, ea 1 uesday, aged Oa years. The trustees of the Southern railroad have awarded to the Baltimore Bridge company the contract to build a bridge over the Kentucky river. 1 he bridge is 276 feet high, 1200 long, and will coat $377,600. The daughter of M. Kelting. at Penin sula, three miles from Sandusky, while drawing water from a well Thursday, fell in Head Bret and drowned, nhe waa in the water an lour before found. She waa sixteen years old. A train oa the Paineaville and Youngs town Narrow Gauge railway was blown from the track near Wilson's Corners Wednesday. The cars were blown com pletely from .the Irack and turned over upon tne side, bul were not badly wrecked, No one was seriously hurt. At a meeting of friends and officers of the Bpringhsld, Jackson and Pomemy narrow usnge railway in Cincinnati, Wednesday, it waa resolved that work would not be begun until $900,000 bad been subscribed. The road is just one hundred miles in length, and if the sum named is subscribed a bonded debt of not more than $500,000, or $6000 per mile, will be necessary. The amount thus far subscribed ia $028,000. vYaalalairloa. The President mav so to his farm in Missouri belore he goes to Long Branch The Cabinet was in session but a short time yesterday. Ail the members were present except Delano and Jewell. No business of importanos was considered The moiety system has not been entire ly abolished, as has been supposed. The repeal only relates to moieties derived from violations of the customs revenue laws, and does not include the posto&ice and some or tbe branches of the service. There is about $6,500,000 worth of sil ver bullion in the mint. All the branch es will be kept running closely in coining large and small pieces, and silver coins to the aggregate amount stated will probably be struck on during the year. These coins are to be issued in place of the present fractional currency, as provided by the law of January 14, 1870. Fires. The lighthouse at Port Maitland, On tario, was burned down Thursday night. The Douglass woods, near Sutton, Mass., are on hre, and 700 acres have been burned over. Two flouring mills and several tenement houses were burned at Watertown, New x orK, yesterday. Loss $oo,000. Foreign. The festival at Nagasaki. Japan, in commemoration of the events in Formo sa, continued three days, with great spirit. Her Majesty Victoria has authorized tbe continuation of the word "Niagara" on the colors of the 100th regiment. where it waa originally put to commemo rate an event of 1813, ADDITIONAL CITY NEWS. Local Personal. Hon. T, E. Cunningham, of Lima, ia in the city. Senator Thurman arrived in the city last night,- and is stopping at (he Net1 House, t. ..... Edwards Pierrepont, the new Attorney General, studied law In this city with Judge P. B. Wilcox, and practiced here several years. Bev. Dr. E. L. Bexford has been regu- arly elected pastor of the Universaiiat Church in San Francisco, for one year from the first of April last, at a salary of thirtysix hundred dollars in gold. S. GuBderfer, Thomas Joqvet, Albert Herch, M. Clements, Wm. punn, Cincin. nnti; L. L. Cantwell, Coshocton; Senator Paul, Knox county; James M. Hull, Cleveland; J, M. Barr, Circleville; T. E, Punniiighaip, ima; Jay Blchley, Marys- yille, are stopping at the American House. : Among the arrivals aj the Neil Ilouse last night were G. B. Johnson, Granville; W. H. Lewis, Cincinnati; W. T. Carey, Xenia; B. M. O'Ferrall, Kenyon College; C. M. Nichols and wife, Springfield; A. H. Massey, Henry Eichardson, Ira A- Martin, Cleveland; Charles L. Olds, Springfield; John Gwynn, W. P. Noblei E. Seney, Tiffin; James Murray, Sidney' D. W. Brown, Sandusky. Dr. E. S. Breyfogle has started for Cal ifornia, and expects to join his brother in San Jose. He carries with him the hearty good wishes of his young friends in Co lumbus. When Pr. Breyfogle looks upon the beauty and vast extent of San Fran cisco, it will require all his confidence in parental veracity to enable him to realize that when his father, Councilman Charles Breyfogle, was there, the city contained only about half a doten houses. Coun: oilman Breyfogle was a "fortyniner." TrannlRilon. A business man in this city received a letter the other day from an ice dealer in Michigan, ordering ice tools. The letter was written in German, and business man could not read a word of it. A German friend across the way was appealed to and brought into requisition in the capacity of translator. After reading the letter forward, backward, crosswise, upside down and every other way, he explained to the dealer, "Well, it says C. O. D. Dat means coom on tirectly," and a smile beamed on his countenance at his wonderful powers in Ihe translation line as Aurora illumines the heavens, Colnmuns and Toledo. President M, M, Greene met twenty or thirty prominent gentlemen of Toledo at the Boody House Thursday evening, in in informal way, to present the situation of the Columbus and Toledo Bailroad company. Mr. Greene said that tbe com. pany held written contracts for eightyfive miles of the right of way, leaving thirty five to be obtained at a cost of about $90, uuu, jn Columbus, sixtylour persons had subscribed $410,000; the greatest part of this was subscribed before the panic, and fully $200,000 of it by persons who bad been crinnled bv the financial nrpss. ure. The stockholders had instructed the Board to make strenuous exertion to raise the subscription to $1,000,000 by the 1st of June, and failing in that to abandon the road and release the su bscribers. Mr. Greene expressed his confidence that the road oould be built if $40,000 could be raised in Columbus and $60,000 in Toledo. He spoke of a feeling in Toledo that the new road waa a neoestity to the Hocking Valley, and that that corporation would build it; but he remarked that al though Ihe connection was an important one, ine nocaing valley was not so anxious for it as they were two veara aio. having secured connections with Toledo wnicli were not anticipated two years ago; but still th.y hsd raised $200,000, which uwy coosiaerea ineir mil snare. Mr. Greene declared there waa no lien- combs ia tbe resolution to abandon the road unless the million dollars were raised. It simply meant that the road must fsil or succeed now. There would be no dif ficulty in raising the $40,000 in Columbus, if the $00,000 could be aeeund ia Toledo; if that failed, then Columbus would not respond. The failure or success of the road thus rested with Toledo. arrlasre Lkeana. The following marriage licenses have been issued during the past week : Charley Frill and Lucy Sampson, John F. Hanchard and Martha' Fickle. John H. Greene and Eiitabeth A. McDonald, Otto Both and Mary Werner, Jacob Zimnier and Mary Zimnier, Thomas H.Thomas and Margaret Price. Meal t-alaie Tama.ler. Deeds have been filed in the Recorder's office since our last report as follows : Tbe city of Columbus to John H. Hunt, lot 17 in tbe City addition to the city of Columbus, July 3. 1874, for $3465. n. nation to John II. Hunt, lot of Addison Watson's addition to the city af Columbus. March 24. 187ft. for 11200. hvan K. (iriliiilb. to Frerin-ixlr Millar mw, Charles L. B salty, south-east quarter of lot 290 of M. L Sullirant's Western addition to Columbus, April 30, UTS, for $400. Asa Litermore and George W. Ogden to n.ura uguen, t acres ol laud In Sharon township. Anril 27. 1876. for t'iuuo. Asa L. Parker to James T. Arnett. lot 10 in Asa L. Parker's subdivision of a part of lot 5 of Stevenson's subdvision in the city of vw.uiuh -luicucr i, IOI, lor Asa L. Parker to J. T. Arnetl, lot 11 in Asa I. Parker's subdivision of part of lot 5 of SteveusoD's subdivision in tbe city of Co- iumuuB, ainiiu ioid, rorf33U. Henry E. (Jill to Itebecca Kingsley, lot 24 iu neury a. uiu s aauition to tbe city ot Columbus, March 31, 1876, fur $075, W illiam T. Delashmatt to Leroy W. Budd, 75 seres qf laud in Perry township, February 28, 1875. for $6500. Louis Oorrieri to John Walsh, 10 feet off the south side of lot 1 of William Miii-hell'i subdivision of John Short's subdivision of lots sand Tot lot 6 of W. G. Desbler's addition to the city of Columbus, April 27. 1U7K avnl.nAnr A. r ' cAtunuuo ui jiupar.y una .1. New Advertisements. Has removed his LAW OFFICE to tbe 8. E. Cor. of State and Hlah Sireeie. Over (he Banking House of Ids St Co. myl 3m FARM FOB SALE On Long Time with Annual Payment. THE RODNEY COMSTOCK FARM, four miles from the corporation line of this city, on tbe Worthington road, containing 70 acres of improved land, beautifully located, handsome house, goodout-build-iogs, fences, elc , one of the most desirable residences in the county. Inquire of O. E. tHiKH, Administrator, K. MAIN, 12 and 14 North High street, and Commercial Bank. myl s aw it GRAND OPENING And Free Lunch at 123 and 127 FAST FRIEND STREET. Oa Sntardny Evening:, Hay 1, At I F. X, HAVING ADDED THE LARGE ROOM, No. 123 East Friend street, to mr pres eut accommodations, will open as above with a Bug Fxreo Xj u. xo. o la. 1 Andaaplendid Musical Kntcrtaiument,choice Liquors and Uoster's Beer. AH are invited to come. SMIL A. SELBACH, ap30 2t Proptietor. ATTACHMENT.'' Titos. B. Potts 4 Son 1 Before John B. Grove, v. j.r., r ranmin Coun- Conrad Dillis. J ty, Ohio. ON THE 30th DAY OF MARCH. A. D. 1875, 1 issued an order of attachment iu tbe above entit'ed action for the sum of $24.10. JOHN H. GROVE, J. P. Columbus, O., April 29, 1875. myl 1 14 ATTACHMENT. F. Wohlleben ) Before J. H. Grove, J. P, v. t of Franklin County, John Todd. J Ohio. rvN THE FOURTH DAY OF FEBRU- J ARV. A. D. 1875. 1 issued an order of attachment in tbe above entitled actioD, for the sum of $57.10. JOHN H. GROVE, J. P. Columbia, April 29, 1875. myl 3 10 D00K, SASH and LUMBER CO. - MANUFACTURERS OP BUILDERS' MILL WORK, AND nSALS IN I j XJ 31 U 13 I, LATH AND BHINeLEg, Stair Work, Counters, Store Fitting and Turning dona to order. WE ARE SELLING LUMBER AND Mill Work at greatly reduced prices, and we (ball keep our figures at the lowist in the market. Lumber seasoned Dy tne neacn process. Factory dr Yard Went Brond Street. ap24 eod 6m lor4p FIELD BROS & CO WHOLESALE IN MANUFACTURERS insurance, Railroad & Transportation Cm GLASS ADVERTISING SIGNS roa IVIET BUSINISB. No. 1SX South XXltYli, . (Over Ohio Furniture Co.) je!8 1 or 4p ly FOR S ua. Xj El! At our new salesrooms, MOS). 147 aad 148 WENT FOURTH ST., (Between Race and Elm) CINCINNATI, O, Thn Largest Stock of Carriages In tbe city, including the Latest Styles for Spring and Summer use, We Call Special Attention to our improved Sidebar Wagon, the stand ard ot excellence. Bend turcircuiar. J. W. GOSLING. a20 3m lor4p Factory cor. 61b t Sycamore. si. CLAY BK.IGGS, Attorney at Law and Notary Pnbllc, Odtoo Building, first stairs south of P. 0 ELLIOTT JONES & Booksellers and Stationers, 47 NOTJTII HIGH STBEET, OOLUMBUS, OHIO, Wealsl reepectlnllr call alteatiost ( the loUevTiaf laetas NEW BOOKS. All new Books nwivrd hv avtirM frnin New York on tbe day of publication Rnoka not in stock ean us supplied very quickly, ss we have express packages from hew York almost every uay. CREDIT. W'a give credit to responsible nartieannlv. and as we loose nothing by this, can afford to sell goods as low as auy. We make special discounts to cash trarchnsers, and wish it koowo that we CANNOT BK UNUKRaOLD. For proof of tbia we invita examination and comparison. PICTURES. A fllll tte.Miioil af Rtfl Enfrrftvincr. nnrl Praoir'i fine Floral Ciossei and Uotioei tnar ba Been at our itore, at price, at low as they can be told. Ibe new gold and silver Wire Picturt Cord.wbiuh will not break, supplied to those who buy pictures and frames. Office Stationery. All kinds of first-class Office Stationery kept on baud in large quantities, such as Blank Books. A fine assortment. All ledgers sunulied with Arden's patent index, whereby much time is saved in posting. Call and etamine them. Dixon's Lead Pencils. We are sole agents tor Dixon's American Graphite Pencils for Central Ohio. These pencils are fast taking the place of Faber's in tbe American Market, and all who have tried them use them in preference to Faber's. Call and examine them. REMEMBER CENTRAL BOOK STORE, Next Door to the Old 3STO. 47 SOUTH .I'!., ' . Columbus, Oliio. ' ap?8 w s 11 O 13 'V. JL. G Jk W Xa 3 11, LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S W i k Malcer, AKD DUMB TS HUMAN IIAIXl GOODS, 7T K. TOWM si'., oolanabna, O. JseT-Cash paid for Human Hair. . oc!6 dawly la4p PETER SMART'S MACHINE SHOP t'OMJMBCS, OHIO. MANUFACTURER OF ENGINES, ALL kinds of Machinery, Jail Work, Rail- intra and U rati dim. All kinds of Brewers' Fixtures. Ord its solicited from all parts of tha country. . ., . ian22 6m lortp AUorney-at'Law, Notary Public, and Qtmral Cok NO. 5 NOR I It UIUH STREET. TIROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO 17 business Id bis oare. Haviutr connec tion with collecting agencies East and West, cati make collections at cheapest rates. Re iCTaby permission to W ALrfciK MUKfunuri, Keal rotate Agent. apiddm TEASDALE'S DIE HOUSE, 205 WALMITST., Cincinnati, O. ' ' Getifs' and Ladiet' Garments Cleaned & Dyed &SenA stamp for Book containing price list, useful information regarding colors and Hints on Dry Goods. aulo lylor4p United States Mail. OHIO. P03TOFFICE DEPARTMENT, ' ) Wahhinqton, March ill, 1876. J PROPOSALS WILL BE RECEIVED AT THE Con tine t Office of this Department until 3 o'aloek p. m. of Mav 31, 1876 (to be deoided on' or before June 10, 187), for carrying the mails of the United States from July 1, 1875, to June 10, 1870, on the following routes in the State of Ohio, and by the schedule ol departures and ar rivals Herein specinoa, vis; OHIO. Service 1875 to 170. 9217. From Harrisonvllle to Dexter, 8 miles mid bnck. once a week. Leave llarrisonville Saturday at 10 a mi arrive at Dexter by VI m; leave uexier oaturuay ai (am; arrive nt nnr rinonville by 0 a in. Bond required with bid, $100. ' 9525. From Streetshorough to Earhflle, miles flndback.aix times a week. Leave Streets-borough daily, except Sunday, at u a m; arrive at Karlville by It) a m; leave Earl vi lie daily, except Sunday, ot 1 p mi arrive at streets bo rough by 2 n in. laoud required with bid, tiw, 9540. From R itch Held Center, by Berkev, to Syivmtn, 1" miles and back, twice a week l.nnve Hiohfleld Center Tuesday and Saturday at Sam; arrive at Sylvania bylU:3tami leave Sylvan! a Tuesday aud Saturday at I p m; Arrive at Kioimeiu veuier uy p ui. aoaa required with bid, $.200. 9568. From Allensvllle to McArthur.7 miles and bacK, twice a ween. L-eflve Auensvnie Wednesday and Saturday at 7 a mi arrive at Mo Arthur bv 9 a m; leave McArthur Wednesday and Saturday at 3 p m; arrive at Allensville by 6 pm. Bond required with bid, BSHG. From Utica. bv Homer and Look, to Centerburgh, 14 miles and back.threo times a week. Leave Utica Tuesday, Thursday aud Saturday at 8 a m; arrive at Centerburgh by 12 m; leave Centerburgh Tuesday, Thursday and Baturduy at 1 p mi arrive at Utica by 6 p in. Bond required with bid, $600. u(iT. From D-xter City, by Crooked Tree, Keith's. Hidae, Claytona and Crooked Tree. -to Dexter City, equal to 12 miles and back, three times a ween, uvava jwciier uuy meaiiay, Thursday and Saturday at 9 a m; arrive at Dexter City by 3 p m. Bond required with bid, 4100. 9688. From Dexter City to Fulda,7milesand back, tnree umei a wee. L.eave Dexter city iuesaHy, ahuibuwy uu oiuiiruay a v a m, arrive at Fulda bv 11 a in; leave Fulda Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 12 m; arrive at Dexter City by 2 p m. Bond required with bid, $300. 05)9. From Watertown. by Churchtown, to Marietta, t miles and back, twice a week. Leave Watertown Wednesday end Saturday at Tarn; arrive at Marietta by lo a mi leave Marietta Wsdnsiday and Saturday at 1 p mi arrive at CO., WRITING FLUID. All principal kinds of Writing Fluid kept in slock.esptcially Stafford's Chemical Fluid, equal to Arnold's in every respect, as ws can satisfy sll who choose to call. Stafford t Combined Writing and Copying Fluid is th. best Copying Ink in tbe market, Arnold's, Carter's Hover's and French Copying Inks also kept on hand . JET BLACK INK, We also keep a Jet Black Ink for those who want an ink te writs black when first used. CARMINE INK Tbe best quality of pure Carmine Fluid, put up in fiat bottles which do not tip over . Call and see them. WRITING PAPERS. A large atoak of both fancy and staple pa" , ners aud envelopes just received, including . Ihe new LINEAR PAPKTKKlhS aud the , Pretty Papcterles, containing both granite and repp paper. ENVELOPES. Business men will do well to examine onr stock of LITHOGRAPHED Envelopes. We receive orders for envelopes, with linn name and business card Lithographed thereon, almost as cheap as the ordinary printed en velopes are sold, call and see them, , CROQUET. Our summer sunnlv of Croonet is in. Make your selection while Ihe slock ia large and complete.' . THE PLACE, ' ,J Postofflce Arcade, ', XZIOXZ STHiaET, WntRrtown by 4 d m. Bond reauired with bid. 1300. wo. rrom soutn Bioomneid. nv Bt. rau . to Mircy, 11 mi let nd back, twice a week. Leave- So uth Bloomfleld Wednesday and Saturday atl p m; arrive at Marcy by 4 p m; leave Marcy Wednesday and Saturday at T a m; arrive at South Bloomrteld by 10 am. Bona required w tb bid. .31.0. 0571. From Attiea, by Omar, Reedtown aux Bismarck, to Urban, 11 miles and back, six limes a week. Leave Attica daily, except Sun-day, at 9 a m; arrive at Havana by lit m; leave Llavana daily, except Sunday, at 1 p mi arrive at Attioa by 4 pm. Bond required with bid ,$700. 9bl2, From Oxford, by Morning Sun, to Fair Baven, H miles and buck, six times a week. Leave Oxford daily, except Sunday, at 9 a m, arrive at Fair Haven by 12 m; leave Kair Haven usuy, except ounamy, ai o.m a mi arrive at ui- lora uy o ou n n Bond reauired with bid, $708. U3i3. f rom unagrin runs, oy uunseii in. o.j nnd north Kuse:l (a. o.), to Chester Cross Roads, 8 miles and back, six times a week. Leave Chagrin Fulls daily, except Sunday, al U;3J a m; arrive at Chester Cross Roads by 1:30 Dm; leave Chester Cross Roads dnily.exoept Sunday, at a-UU a m; arrive at Chagrin Falls by lu:30 am. Bond required with bin, $509, , 9574. Fro rii New Burlington, by tlur ney villa (n. o.) to Wilmington, M milea and back, twice a week. Leave New Burl mi ton Tuesday and Saturday at 2 p m; arrive at Wilmington by 6 p ni; leave Wilmington Tuesday and SAturday at 9 a m; arrive at New Burlington by 12 m. Bond required with bid, 1300. n.iffi o.) and Johnson's Mills (. o), to Nobleville, JO miles and back, ouce a week. Leave Lvaon'i rroin xjson b, oy tvacttiev s eioren. Saturday At 8 a m; arrive at Nobleville by 11 a in; leave iobioviiie (Saturday at iz mi arrive at Dyson's by 3 p m. Bond required with bid, $100. U57U. From Little Sandusky to Wyandot, 5) miies and back, once a week.' Leave Little San-dusky Saturday at 9 am, arrive at Wyandot by 19:30 a m; leave Wyandot Saturday at 7 a m; ar rive at Li tie Sandufky by ,80 a m.( Bond re- 9577. From Point Marbtehead. bv Marble head, to Daubury, 8 milea and back, three times a weea, jjtave roint MAimeneaa jues i day, Thursday and Saturday at 1 a hi; arrive at iMnbury by 9:30 a m; leave Danbury Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 10 a m; arrive at Point Marblehead by U:30 p ai. Bond required with bid, $300. ( . 9578. From Cincinnati, oy uaiuornia, sweet Wine. New Palestine. New Richmond. Point Pleasantand Moscow, to Felicity, 36 miles and back, six times a week. Leave Cincinuati daily, except Sunday, at 6 a m; arrive at Felicity by i2 in! leave Felicity daily, except Sunday.at 1 p mi arrive at Cincinnati by 8 p ni. Bond required with bid, $3100, 9579. From Moscow, by Neville, Chilo, Smith's Landing, Higginsport and Lavanna, to nipiey, m nines tuia ohck, mre unit n wour. Leavo Moscow Tueaday.Thur&day aad Sntnrday at 6 a m; arrive at Ripley by 1 p ni, leave Ripley Mondnv. Wednesday and Friday at 6 a m; arrive At Moscow by 1 p m Boud required with bid, $800. 96iO. From Manchester, by Vineyard Hill and Stout's, to Vunceburgh (Ky.), 19 miles and back, thiee timeB a week. Leave Manchester Tuesduv, Thursday and Saturday at 6 am; ar- rie at vanceDurgn tiy ia mt reave vanceourgn Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 1 p m; arrive at Manchester by 7 p in. Bond required with bid, $i 00. I'OSl. from ronsmouin, uy rri;iiusiiiiJ,ruiiu Run and Freentone, to Vtinceburgh (KfOi 2s miles and bnck, three limes a week Leave Pnrtumotith Tnesiinv. Thursday and Saturday at fl ami arrive at Vunceburgh by 12 mi leavo Vanceourgn Tuesony, in u ran ay ana naiuraay at 1 p m.; arrive at Portsmouth by 7 p tn. Bond reqiureo witn uia, ow. Unfi2. From Ironton. bv Coal Grove. Sheridan Coal Works, South Point, Burlington and Rock-wood, to Huntington (W. Va.), 23 miles and hank, three times a week. Leave Ironton Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 0 am; ar rive at Huntington by V m; leave Huntington Tuesday, Thurriday , and Saturday at lp arrive at Ironton by 7 p m. Bond reauired wi bid, $700. For laws relation to the postal service, forms of proposal , bond And certificate, and for instructions and conditions to beembraoedin the contract, tee advertisement of thiB date in pamphlet form, to be found at the termini of each route, or address tbe Second Assistant Poatrr aster General. Bids should be sent in scaled envelopes, superscribed "Mail Proposal?, State of Ohio,' and addressed to the Second Assistant Post master General, Washington. D. C. aprlO ltaw fit Postmaster General. PH. J. HIIOMEH, Noe. 270 and 274 South Fourth Street, COIXMHim, OHIO, : General Agent for the Celebrated Grossius Ventilation Furnace, And School House Stove, Also, for the Improved Alligator Goal Cook Stove, Patented 1874. Dealer in ail kinds of Oooking and Heating Stoves, Galvanized Iron Work, Tin.Oop-per and Iron Ware, nov26 eod ly .flays, ana nunareai s,j ivw